An observational study examining the relationship between respiratory symptoms, airway inflammation and bacteriology in children with severe neurodisability.

<h4>Background</h4>Children with severe neurodisability (ND) commonly suffer from chronic respiratory symptoms that impact greatly on quality of life, and lead to recurrent hospital admissions. This morbidity (and its causes) is poorly described, despite being well recognised by paediatr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ruth E Trinick, Lara Bunni, Kent Thorburn, Angela P Hackett, Mark Dalzell, Paul S McNamara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124627
_version_ 1831726184468054016
author Ruth E Trinick
Lara Bunni
Kent Thorburn
Angela P Hackett
Mark Dalzell
Paul S McNamara
author_facet Ruth E Trinick
Lara Bunni
Kent Thorburn
Angela P Hackett
Mark Dalzell
Paul S McNamara
author_sort Ruth E Trinick
collection DOAJ
description <h4>Background</h4>Children with severe neurodisability (ND) commonly suffer from chronic respiratory symptoms that impact greatly on quality of life, and lead to recurrent hospital admissions. This morbidity (and its causes) is poorly described, despite being well recognised by paediatricians. In this study, we characterised respiratory symptoms in children with ND at times of stability and deterioration. We also assessed the relationship between respiratory symptoms, lower airway inflammatory markers and levels of infection/colonisation.<h4>Methods</h4>ND children were recruited upon admission for elective surgery (Elective-ND [n = 16]), or acutely upon admission to Intensive Care (PICU-ND [n = 19]), and compared to healthy control children [n = 12]. Parents completed a validated respiratory symptom questionnaire in which symptoms associated with activity were removed (total maximal score of 108). Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) was collected, and BAL neutrophil counts, IL-8 and TGFβ-1 levels measured. BAL microbial analysis was performed using a 16S/18S rRNA gene based assay and Pseudomonas aeruginosa PCR.<h4>Results</h4>All ND children had high levels of respiratory symptoms (median [IQR] symptom score PICU-ND, 55[38-64]; Elective-ND, 26[7-45]; Control, 4[0-7]: p<0.01), which affected their families, particularly at nighttime. Elective-ND patients with a total respiratory symptom score >20 invariably had BAL neutrophilia. Elective patients with 16S/18S microbial rDNA positive BAL had higher neutrophil counts (positive, 33[18-70]%; negative, 8[4-38]%: p<0.05) and generally higher symptom scores (positive, 17[5-32]; negative, 5[0-9]: p = 0.097). Streptococcus mitis was commonly identified in BAL from ND children; Pseudomonas aeruginosa was not identified in any sample.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Children with severe ND often have high levels of chronic respiratory symptoms, which may relate to lower airway inflammation. Bacterial airway colonisation, particularly with oral commensals, may play a role in both symptom generation and inflammation.
first_indexed 2024-12-21T06:04:04Z
format Article
id doaj.art-f1324e35c7a143b3b85860a97a40ea2a
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-21T06:04:04Z
publishDate 2015-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-f1324e35c7a143b3b85860a97a40ea2a2022-12-21T19:13:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01104e012462710.1371/journal.pone.0124627An observational study examining the relationship between respiratory symptoms, airway inflammation and bacteriology in children with severe neurodisability.Ruth E TrinickLara BunniKent ThorburnAngela P HackettMark DalzellPaul S McNamara<h4>Background</h4>Children with severe neurodisability (ND) commonly suffer from chronic respiratory symptoms that impact greatly on quality of life, and lead to recurrent hospital admissions. This morbidity (and its causes) is poorly described, despite being well recognised by paediatricians. In this study, we characterised respiratory symptoms in children with ND at times of stability and deterioration. We also assessed the relationship between respiratory symptoms, lower airway inflammatory markers and levels of infection/colonisation.<h4>Methods</h4>ND children were recruited upon admission for elective surgery (Elective-ND [n = 16]), or acutely upon admission to Intensive Care (PICU-ND [n = 19]), and compared to healthy control children [n = 12]. Parents completed a validated respiratory symptom questionnaire in which symptoms associated with activity were removed (total maximal score of 108). Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) was collected, and BAL neutrophil counts, IL-8 and TGFβ-1 levels measured. BAL microbial analysis was performed using a 16S/18S rRNA gene based assay and Pseudomonas aeruginosa PCR.<h4>Results</h4>All ND children had high levels of respiratory symptoms (median [IQR] symptom score PICU-ND, 55[38-64]; Elective-ND, 26[7-45]; Control, 4[0-7]: p<0.01), which affected their families, particularly at nighttime. Elective-ND patients with a total respiratory symptom score >20 invariably had BAL neutrophilia. Elective patients with 16S/18S microbial rDNA positive BAL had higher neutrophil counts (positive, 33[18-70]%; negative, 8[4-38]%: p<0.05) and generally higher symptom scores (positive, 17[5-32]; negative, 5[0-9]: p = 0.097). Streptococcus mitis was commonly identified in BAL from ND children; Pseudomonas aeruginosa was not identified in any sample.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Children with severe ND often have high levels of chronic respiratory symptoms, which may relate to lower airway inflammation. Bacterial airway colonisation, particularly with oral commensals, may play a role in both symptom generation and inflammation.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124627
spellingShingle Ruth E Trinick
Lara Bunni
Kent Thorburn
Angela P Hackett
Mark Dalzell
Paul S McNamara
An observational study examining the relationship between respiratory symptoms, airway inflammation and bacteriology in children with severe neurodisability.
PLoS ONE
title An observational study examining the relationship between respiratory symptoms, airway inflammation and bacteriology in children with severe neurodisability.
title_full An observational study examining the relationship between respiratory symptoms, airway inflammation and bacteriology in children with severe neurodisability.
title_fullStr An observational study examining the relationship between respiratory symptoms, airway inflammation and bacteriology in children with severe neurodisability.
title_full_unstemmed An observational study examining the relationship between respiratory symptoms, airway inflammation and bacteriology in children with severe neurodisability.
title_short An observational study examining the relationship between respiratory symptoms, airway inflammation and bacteriology in children with severe neurodisability.
title_sort observational study examining the relationship between respiratory symptoms airway inflammation and bacteriology in children with severe neurodisability
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124627
work_keys_str_mv AT ruthetrinick anobservationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability
AT larabunni anobservationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability
AT kentthorburn anobservationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability
AT angelaphackett anobservationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability
AT markdalzell anobservationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability
AT paulsmcnamara anobservationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability
AT ruthetrinick observationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability
AT larabunni observationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability
AT kentthorburn observationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability
AT angelaphackett observationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability
AT markdalzell observationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability
AT paulsmcnamara observationalstudyexaminingtherelationshipbetweenrespiratorysymptomsairwayinflammationandbacteriologyinchildrenwithsevereneurodisability